So was it hosted on Namecheap or were they just the domain registrar?
If they were just the domain registrar I think this is a dangerous precedent. If anything, it is just going to cause people to sympathise with the Daily Stormer, which is presumably the opposite of the intended effect.
From having a browse around, the site appears to be basically a joke. It's pretty distasteful but I personally don't think it warrants being taken down.
The domain registrar aspect of it is what is concerning about this, I think. Sites are thrown off hosts all the time, but there's generally someone out there willing to do hosting. Domain registrars are a different story, I think. Not only have they until recently not been political territory (opening up new territory for the Culture Wars is always a concerning thing IMHO), but the costs to starting up one's own domain registrar are quite high. I am legitimately curious if the choices of registrars here are because the owner of the Stormer knows he'll get publicity by being thrown off them, or because there actually aren't options for them.
A lot of the "First Amendment" vs "private companies aren't obligated to provide service" arguments could be sidestepped by the acknowledgment that we do have a history of certain companies becoming public utilities. Would it be acceptable (or even legal) for a phone company to deny phone service to Nazis? Could an electric company turn off power to the homes of KKK members because of their membership? Does the water company have a right to cut off the tap to Richard Spencer's house/offices because they don't want to quench hate's thirst? Maybe such things should or shouldn't apply to the world of the Internet, but I do wish that a lot of the arguments didn't assume that we live in some sort of anarcho-capitalist society of purely voluntary contracts.
> Not only have they until recently not been political territory ...
Sure they have. Many domains have been revoked for association with "piracy". For example, a famous hip-hop fan site, whose name I forget now. It took them years to get unblocked. But I do agree that the Culture Wars aspect is troubling.
I don't understand. Do you have a complaint about the journalistic integrity of Vice? Are you suggesting that the Daily Stormer editor was coerced into speaking in the video or that his words were taken out of context?
The police officers were flying the surveillance helicopter over the crowds downtown when their helicopter crashed, so I'd agree with Vice that their deaths are related to the events.
This is more just blaming the media for everything. How is reporting on a police helicopter crash related to the event not newsworthy? Trump himself tweeted about it, and by the way, we still haven't heard anything on the cause.
Let's focus our upset feelings on the things that actually matter, like neo-Nazis in our streets, rather than on nit-picking journalistic investigations into them.
Because they conflate the two. I've seen it in so many headlines regarding this event. It's not just the one casualty due to the car incident, they then go on and word it such that you'd think two police men died as a direct result of the protests.
It's way worse than a bunch of people walking around espousing racist views. Real-time subtle manipulation of large amounts of individuals is what actually matters. Democracy/society breaks down when you have large-scale brainwashing and suppression of dissenting opinions/views past a certain tipping point. Ironically, I'd argue that's a large component of how the Nazis in Germany rose to power.
> If anything, it is just going to cause people to sympathise with the Daily Stormer
I think that people who are willing to sympathize with neo-Nazis because a domain registrar refused to process their registration should be considered as just a subset of "Nazi sympathizers," and their views treated accordingly.
> From having a browse around, the site appears to be basically a joke. It's pretty distasteful but I personally don't think it warrants being taken down.
The site certainly presents itself as a joke to avoid substantive criticism or engagement with the viewpoints it's promoting from detractors. But, say, altright.com takes them seriously, and lists them alongside clearly-not-joking Neo-Nazi organization Identity Evropa:
The Daily Stormer has been promoting the event heavily and it looks like they are going to bring a lot of young new cadres to the rally. Identity Evropa will be there as well as several Southern Nationalist groups. There will be no Alt-Lite co-rally, it will be just us, the proverbial and literal White Guard out there defending the statue of General Lee. This is a good development. They are quickly becoming irrelevant and losing their street presence as we continue to grow and take up space.
No one knows how many of us will show up there just yet. A conservative estimate would put us at about 500, although if the Daily Stormer book clubs, frog twitter, and affiliated groups come through, we can top 1000.
They mention themselves that 4chan was the place where ironic appreciation of Hitler grew into earnest appreciation of Hitler:
Anti-Semitic and racist jokes had been a key feature of /b/, but on /pol/ the sentiments behind the jokes slowly became serious, as people realized they were based on fact. /pol/ became a haven for virulent anti-Semites and aggressive racists, and tone of the Alt-Right is drawn directly from these roots on 4chan.
On 4chan, the Jewish problem was analyzed by news junkies and history buffs, feminism was deconstructred by sexually frustrated young men, and race was considered based on the actual data on the issue. The rehabilitation of Adolf Hitler and the NSDAP largely took place on 4chan.
Anti-Semitic and racist jokes had been a key feature of /b/, but on /pol/ the sentiments behind the jokes slowly became serious, as people realized they were based on fact. /pol/ became a haven for virulent anti-Semites and aggressive racists, and tone of the Alt-Right is drawn directly from these roots on 4chan.
[...] This made promoting the right-wing agenda not only meaningful, but also extremely fun. The Alt-Right carries with it that spirit of fun.
So, sure, maybe they are a distasteful joke. They are also earnestly advocating Hitler's ideology and Nazi ideology by name. The joke is a front, to push the Overton window far enough in their direction that the non-joking version of their ideology becomes tenable.
I would sympathize with them on this issue. This is actually the second time this week I have been called a Nazi sympathizer essentially for believing everyone, including Nazis, should be able to air their views in such a way that interested people can hear them. (i.e., they don't have the right to spam everyone, but they shouldn't be blacklisted from businesses otherwise open to everyone just because of the content of their speech).
Being unironically called a "Nazi sympathizer" is by far the most chilling thing to me that has happened of all the political events that have occurred in the last few years. It is also sad that I have to add a disclaimer that I have voted Democrat in the last decade of elections, am not a bigot, etc, etc, (not that someone using this sort of language would believe me).
Do people who say these sorts of things not realize the massive irony of accusing people who defend basic rights of a generally detested group of being "Nazi sympathizers"?
> If anything, it is just going to cause people to sympathise with the Daily Stormer, which is presumably the opposite of the intended effect.
There are two different things you can sympathize with here: the merits of the Daily Stormer's position / ideology, and their desire to have a platform.
The domain registrar is shutting them down because they don't agree with the merits of their ideology. I am reading the criticism above as saying, "If the domain registrar shuts them down, more people will be sympathetic to their ideology, which is counterproductive." I think it is fair to label people inclined to sympathy with Nazi ideas as Nazi sympathizers.
I suppose it could be an argument that the domain registrar's action will cause people to be sympathetic to the fact that they should have a domain name, but that makes less sense to me.
> I think it is fair to label people inclined to sympathy with Nazi ideas as Nazi sympathizers.
OK, fair enough, but that's not what you originally said, nor is it what people are doing when they throw that term at me. They're (sometimes intentionally) conflating advocacy of free speech for repugnant ideas with advocacy of those ideas themselves. But I appreciate your openness to try to see my position.
I certainly have no sympathy for Nazis. But the prospect of an authoritarian Internet is indeed chilling. And that's why we need uncensorable overlay networks and such.
> I think that people who are willing to sympathize with neo-Nazis because a domain registrar refused to process their registration should be considered as just a subset of "Nazi sympathizers," and their views treated accordingly.
And there it is. If you disagree with me, you're a Nazi (subset). Predictable.
I did not say that. I said, if you're sympathize with Nazis, you're a Nazi sympathizer.
I think you can perfectly well disagree with Namecheap's decision without being a Nazi sympathizer (let alone a Nazi, which I accused nobody of being other than The Daily Stormer, who claim alignment with NSDAP policy). That is not what I was replying to. I was replying to the specific claim that people will sympathize with Nazis because of Namecheap's action.
The only predictable thing here is your strawman response, and even so, I would have hoped we'd have a higher quality of discourse on HN.
> I said, if you're sympathize with Nazis, you're a Nazi sympathizer.
If a human is wounded, I will render aid. This has nothing to do with ideological sympathy. There can be, and are, other motives. Making blanket statements, like you continue to make, are irresponsible, at best.
> The only predictable thing here is your strawman response,
It's not a strawman to point out your conceptual failings. Good luck with whatever.
The Namecheap post argues in favor of revoking the domain by saying that it is inciting violence, and not just exercising free speech.
As a domain registrar, there's nothing stopping you from having a policy that doesn't allow the incitement of violence.
But, I wonder: how many domains has Namecheap revoked in the name of this ideal?
If you're going to have a policy of what is and what is not allowed, the reason why it will be so difficult is because you need to enforce the policy on every website equally. You cannot cherry-pick one website, cite the policy, and then forget that it exists.
Even if this policy is applied to every website, who is deciding what counts as incitement of violence? Can I make a violent post on a website, and then report them to Namecheap for inciting violence, or does it need to be a website administrator that makes it? How direct does the incitement need to be, given that the example provided in the blog post seems relatively indirect?
I'm sure you can think of a myriad of other questions and inconsistencies with this, because there's so much room left to interpretation and bias, when it's obvious the reason the domain was revoked was due to political pressure.
Given the amount of companies that have dropped the website, it's starting to set a pretty bad precedent. There's plenty of equally bad content on very large websites (Reddit, 4chan, etc), and if the standard for this content becomes to wipe it from the face of the Internet at all costs, things won't be pretty.
A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds...
Taking down a Nazi website creates no onerous obligation to police the entirety of the web. Addressing only those sites which rise to prominence admirably moves us towards a better internet and society.
Until you (namecheap) are sued for violence that occurred because you failed to take down a website that clearly incited violence, despite it being against your terms of service, started position, and now part behavior. This may make your defense wallet in such a case because you are could now be seen as endorsing that which you do not act against when they are violating your terms.
Of course, it's only one high-profile incident and it should be possible to successfully argue that you (namecheap) only act on this policy when information about the violation actively reaches you as a passive observer. But you are then playing from behind so it's still not as if this action carries no potential future liabilities.
Why would it (legally or not) be Namecheap's job to curate the content?
What about the server the content is hosted on, its CDN, its DNS servers, its domain registry (not registrar), or so many other layers?
If a website that incites violence can be taken down because of a single violence-inciting remark, then people will just post violent remarks on their enemies websites and proceed to get them taken down. As an administrator, whether of a domain, social network, forum, or services on other layers of the Internet, it's unreasonable to be held responsible for every single thing done by your users. That doesn't mean you have to let them do anything, but when a problem occurs, the first step should not be to start taking down websites and servers, instead of looking for a more reasonable solution.
> If you're going to have a policy of what is and what is not allowed, the reason why it will be so difficult is because you need to enforce the policy on every website equally. You cannot cherry-pick one website, cite the policy, and then forget that it exists.
Is perfect enforcement necessary? Of course you need to be _consistent_, but only acting when the content becomes known to you doesn't seem wholely unworkable.
That said, I much prefer it if registrars remained neutral on content (with the possible exception of the domain itself being the problem - consider, e.g., assassinateUSPrez2018[.]com).
e: typo fix "prefer registrars remain" -> "prefer it if registrars remained"
Perfect enforcement is ideal, but definitely impossible, especially based on arbitrary policy statements like 'incites violence'.
In practice they will act when content becomes known to them, but a problem with this is that it will lead to them taking down content when the Internet mobs demand it (as they will spam support tickets, emails, twitter accounts, and so on, demanding the offending website be taken down), instead of focusing on the real problems.
Just like people love getting their political enemies fired from work, now they will start to realize maybe they can do even better, and can get them wiped off of the Internet as well. Every time an attack like this is made, it will further radicalize the other side, giving them further resolve to attack back and with more strength. I just can't see this ending with anything good.
> But, I wonder: how many domains has Namecheap revoked in the name of this ideal? If you're going to have a policy of what is and what is not allowed, the reason why it will be so difficult is because you need to enforce the policy on every website equally. You cannot cherry-pick one website, cite the policy, and then forget that it exists.
You absolutely can do complaint-based rather than pro-active enforcement, and prioritize enforcement based on the volume and nature of the complaints.
"At Namecheap, we believe having a free and open Internet is the only option that will continue the legacy of innovation and openess that stands for everything we all value in our modern society." --Namecheap CEO Richard Kendall, 2011
How do you "incite hatred"? Inciting violence I can understand, but I'm curious what you meant by your statement. I feel hatred can be instilled, but not sure how it can be incited.
The US Supreme court is not the end-all-be-all of legal systems. Most European systems do consider that hate speech can be proscribed, as do most Latin American jurisdictions.
I have been following this story, and each time a corp does this, Daily Stormer, a site 99% of people would never have any interest in, is framed and reinforced as an important piece that represents all our free speech (and braoder rights).
I haven't seen it but even if it's as despicable as I imagine or worse, it's covered under the concept of the first amendment. I support the first amendment as a virtue of integrity.
If you're an American who didn't think about the scope of the first amendment until now, well, that's gotta be embarrassing.
Free speech is not just the right to speak unimpeded by the government, but the right to speak so that you can be heard. (You don't have to be listened to. But people must have the option.) Systematically coordinating to keep speech off the internet is a violation of their moral right to speak, even if it is technically legal.
I am an American who thinks a lot about the entire scope of the First Amendment. Of course the First Amendment is not just, as written, an injunction on Congress, but also a statement of the ideals of a free society. It includes the right to freedom of assembly (by name) and association (not by name, but by clear caselaw), and Namecheap, as a private business, has the right to associate or not associate with whomever they want. A society that obligates a private business to provide business to everyone, whether by cultural norm or by Congressional law, is not a free society.
There are a couple of protected categories, as stated both by the Constitution and by society's norms. Being a neo-Nazi is not one of them.
The site's perfectly available. There are multiple links to it in the thread. No one's right to speech is being infringed.
This does make me wonder if it makes it impossible for those companies to be considered "common carriers" or able to enjoy "safe harbor" laws. By acting to censor legal (however distasteful) content, they could be considered to be policing what their customers do (asserting a custodial role) or refusing based on moral grounds (c.f., Indianapolis "111 Cakery") and subject to a discrimination suit.
Yeah, the 111 Cakery case I'm kind of personally conflicted about. On the one hand, I hope it's clear that refusing service to people because of their race is clearly not okay, and I (personally) think it's good that our society treats sexual orientation the same way. On the other, I know that our society didn't treat sexual orientation the same way until recently, and that a lot of politically-powerful groups would probably add some strange protected classes if they could (cf. my home state of Louisiana's "Blue Lives Matter" law). So the power to create protected classes is not one I really think should be used lightly.
There may be no good answer other than to keep fighting for what's right and against what's wrong and hope that the arc of the universe is bent in the correct direction.
>A society that obligates a private business to provide business to everyone, whether by cultural norm or by Congressional law, is not a free society.
You're probably the 5th person who has said this. Why do you think that's the only other option? Why give such an important issue so little consideration to alternatives?
Because the viewpoint I'm replying to seems to be the sort of First Amendment absolutism that worries that anyone being in any way inconvenienced from speaking in the time, place, forum, and manner of their choice is an immediate threat to a free society. If we're going to be absolutist about the First Amendment like that, it's illogical to be absolutist about free speech and not free assembly or association.
I am personally, as you might guess, not a First Amendment absolutist, and I don't actually think that reasonable inconveniences on free speech cause us to lose the ideal of free speech, nor that reasonable inconveniences on free assembly cause us to lose the ideal of free assembly. I agree that there's room between the two extremes for free assembly - but I believe that because I also believe there's room between the two extremes for free speech.
That's reasonable, thanks for explaining your position better. I read it as, "since you would be inconveniencing businesses, free speech doesn't matter." I'm pretty close to an absolutist, but I'm a near absolutist on all our rights. I'm also wearied by all the rights we've given away in just my lifetime.
I said once on here and got down voted that, "I wish we had someone like the NRA to fight for all our other rights." It's discouraging that people didn't seem to appreciate that.
I think the Russians didn't accept the registration last I saw. If you're wanting to see what people are defending, it's all in the Internet Archive. Sunlight is the best disinfectant for roaches, but these are guys are cunning rats, so you need something stronger.
Nice! I had seen quotes from this, but didn't know where it came from originally.
> It may be worth
stressing, however, that even if one has an extremely strong intellectual commitment to truthseeking
and public education, one can still legitimately and in good conscience explore the question
of how some knowledge might be harmful. In fact, this very commitment demands that one does
not shy away from such an exploration or from reporting openly on the findings.
A straightforward one, which I think has been well-accepted in Western legal thinking for centuries, is slander/libel. If I go around saying "Look, 'dfps is a Nazi," you can get the courts, and if necessary the government's monopoly on violence, to stop me.
Another one that's extremely common is use of a trademark. I do not have a free speech right to say "I provide Microsoft-certified computer repair services." We believe there's more harm to society from me going around causing people to believe that than from me being unable to say that.
Another one is unauthorized practice of law. I do not have a free speech right to say "I know how the GPL works and I can represent you in court." We believe it's more important to a free society that when someone says that, they're actually a trained and licensed lawyer who can competently represent you, and that the harm to you from me going in front of a judge and spouting nonsense on your behalf outweighs the harm from me being unable to speak freely about the GPL.
Do you think that these restrictions on free speech are more harmful than the cases they seek to prevent?
Ha, if you're that sure I doubt I could dissuade you. You might try the millions of other people out there cleverer than me who are willing to it give it go.
But ask yourself, if you're that sure, what's your evidence? I 'd need some strong evidence I was on the right side to hold that absolutist of a belief.
The classic example is someone yelling "fire" in a crowded theatre.
The reason that "free speech" is limited is that limiting it does almost no harm, and allowing it can result in human death.
This actually follows well into the specific example of racist nazi propaganda. The argument is fairly similar; allowing that speech has the chance to, in a more roundabout way, result in human oppression and death.
Limiting it isn't great (especially since it often draws some amount of attention to it), but it does seem plausible that by stopping that speech from getting out there, there's less chance of such a movement forming.
I can't explain where the line is for the difference between saying that word at that time (although I suspect some lawyers might).
I can see there would be a big difference though in yelping a word in that situation and being directly responsible for the harm it caused (mischief maybe?) and expressing a person's ideas and beliefs.
The analogy you put doesn't work out, unfortunately, because ANY idea can result in human oppression and death. For example, the speech that civil rights leaders spoke and wrote that in a roundabout way caused injuries and deaths at protests motivated by them, the speech that fired up the American Revolution and other revolutions.
There should not be limitations on speech. By your logic we should limit speech on engineering and communism as they also have potential for harming people.
>Ru-Center, a private Moscow-based domain registrar, told RFE/RL on August 17 that the company received an official letter from Roskomnadzor requesting that the company look into possibly suspending the domain Dailystormer.ru.
...
>Ru-Center spokesman Yegor Timofeyev told RFE/RL in an e-mail that Roskomnadzor's letter asked the company "to look into [the] possibility of register suspension due to extremist content of this domain."
>"So we decided to suspend [the] domain Dailystormer.ru," he said.
As someone who is facinated by what is happening I spend a decent amount of time spelunking in the dark web.
The Neo-Nazis are not that upset by this. They want to use the same tools to boycott the Zionist and Jews. It's actually one of the many things the Alt-Left and the Alt-Right agree on.
In addition we're making them into martyrs. Banning and suppression was counter productive on the original Nazis and it is counter productive here.
This should be we'll know by those who read civics. It is even codified in the book Rules For Radicals by Saul Alinsky. It makes me wonder what books Antifa are reading as they are doing all of the wrong things.
I get that it feels like we're (non nazis) are winning but we're not and this is isn't helping.
Using the term "Alt-Left" as the opposite of "Alt-Right" only serves to normalize their position on the spectrum by dragging the mainstream "normal" further right. We should refer to them as the "alt-right" (or preferably nazis) vs the mainstream to keep "normal" where it is.
Do you not agree there are extremes on both ends? Calling alt-right or anyone not directly associated with the Nazi party makes the term Nazis less significant.
Now I'm confused. Is Antifa mainstream Left then? I think most people would disagree. What term is more appropriate to describe them? Genuine question.
Anarchists, socialists, and antifascists have been traditionally grouped under the umbrella of "the Left". It's odd seeing people try to push parts of the original Left out into the "Alt-Left", almost like gentrifying a political space.
(Antifascism itself dates back to early 20th century opposition action against fascist tides in Italy, Germany, and Spain; the comparison to the modern phenomenon of the Alt-Right feels historically inappropriate.)
It substantially overlaps with the mainstream of the left; note that in the US, the dominant (though decreasingly so) faction of the Democratic Party is center-right, not left at all.
Sure, but this is political and will probably exceed the HN mandate.
There's literally nothing we can do to stop these disgusting examples of humanity. Rational discourse is predicated on the idea that your opponent isn't purposefully lying. They are.
So leaving them in the sunlight accomplishes nothing, while driving them out of the public sphere while not destroying them, at least helps us as a society set a 'this is where tolerance ends' boundary. That has to exist somewhere, and Nazism is clearly beyond that.
As for making them martyrs, they already cast themselves in that light, and their supporters already see them as that. I don't think losing a web domain will drive the common man into their arms unless they were looking for an excuse.
People downvote for a variety of reasons. In this case, one reason may be that you copy-pasted an earlier comment, which is generally frowned upon on HN.
Where you, and ever other "Free Speech" person misses the point is this isn't the government. There's no "banning and suppression" because you can still legally host your views yourself. The idea that private companies are required to distribute your speech is like implying freedom of the press means that any article you write NYT is required to print.
Turns out, most companies don't want to be associated with Nazis; shocking I know. And, as Nazis are not a protected class in the United States, it's fully within their rights not to do business with them.
It's easy to say "let's all support a version of free speech that's never existed because we believe in the ideology" when these groups aren't targeting you. It's a bitter pill to swallow if you happen to be Jewish, Black, etc.
This viewpoint confuses the legal meaning of the First Amendment, which indeed only applies to the government, with its rationale.
The rationale is the theory that having a diversity of viewpoints, including some that are dangerous or repugnant, is the best approach towards a robust civil society and intellectual growth. If you disagree with something you hear or read, you can ignore it, or you can criticize it, but banning speech causes two undesirable outcomes:
1) The speech will continue anyway, but not in the public eye, where it can be criticized
2) The popularity of an idea is different from the correctness of an idea. It has happened many times that an unpopular or even heretical idea has turned out to be right.
Almost certainly these people are no Galileo. But this approach to free speech is intended to protect the Galileos of the world. It should be kept in mind that talk of revolution in the U.S. during the late 1700s would have been considered extremely dangerous and repugnant by many as well.
This is historical revisionism in the extreme. That rationale is younger than a good number of people on this board, not the golden ideal in the minds of the founders. You're literally posting to a forumn where certain speech is moderated; it's because of that moderation that you post here, otherwise it would be a cesspool of off topic memes and spam (a la /r/programming et al). A private company or even a cabal of private companies cannot ban speech. Nothing is stopping anyone from hosting which ever content they'd like. You are not entitled to the walled garden that Google and others insist is "The Internet".
Private businesses and lay people not wanting to do business with you is fundamentally different from official prosecution. I will gladly fight for any group's protection from governmental over reach; I can't even begin to understand the rational behind choosing "private businesses can't have moderation" as the hill you choose to die on.
Hmm, perhaps instead of "rationale", I should have said "philosophy behind" the 1st Amendment. Obviously the 1st Amendment is not directly intended to cover entities other than the government. But almost everything in the Bill of Rights is essentially intended to protect the rights of minorities against the tyranny of the majority, whose representative is the government. It is not necessary to protect popular views, from either the government or from others.
This philosophy is as old as the university and modern science. It is certainly no younger than the "free speech, but not consequences" argument, which I read as a thinly-veiled way to threaten unpopular views with unspecified "consequences".
> "private businesses can't have moderation"
I wasn't arguing that they can't. Only that it can be unwise and a net negative for our society for them to choose to do so. I would draw a distinction between trolling/spam and someone honestly espousing an unpopular view.
It is true, some kind of filtering is needed, because there's too much information for any individual to absorb. The question is, who (if not me myself) is doing the filtering and what are their incentives? dang's incentives are aligned with mine: good-quality technical discussion, and people aren't blacklisted purely for espousing unpopular views.
The incentives of corporations are not. Google, Facebook, and in this instance, Namecheap, are presumably taking these actions to safeguard their image and maximize profit, not to actually make their users maximally informed. There is a conflict of interest here.
Finally, I think all this becomes much more important when it comes to political speech, because people have a marked tendency to want to shout down, ignore, misrepresent, or otherwise not engage with political views that make them uncomfortable. Look how the media misrepresented the Damore memo. I take no position on the memo itself, but do assert that people are better off knowing actual arguments from all sides, rather than side A blacklisting side B and then giving strawman representations of what B thinks.
See this is where we'll probably never agree. The "all sides" argument, I think, is terribly flawed. There will always "be another side" however there's no guarantee that that side is equally rational or any way valid. That's how you end up with anti-vaxers sitting at the table next to doctors, oil exec sitting next to climate scientists, and intelligent design proponents sitting next to biologists.
It's impossible to rationally debate ideas with no rational foundation; extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence not calls to physical violence or pronouncements of superiority. A world in which "whites are the master race" is just an unpopular view that we should welcome as opposed to an unfounded assertion backed by no evidence is not a world in which any "net positive" has been added to society. When the burden is put on rational people to offer counter arguments as opposed to the extremists to offer evidence rationality loses every time; just look to vaccines and climate change.
I wrote a much longer comment, but long story short:
I'm in medical research. Do I think antivaxxers should be able to publish in medical journals? No (unless they performed an experiment that passes peer review, etc).
Do I think they should be able to run their own websites, have nonviolent meetings or rallies without losing their jobs? Yes, I do. Even though antivaxxers are doing far more harm than neo-Nazis are.
Also, "scientific/academic consensus" and "rationality" are not synonyms.
And yet you're moving the goal posts. No one is saying anyone can't excerise their first ammendment rights; just that by the same token no one can strip private citizens and business of their first amendment rights. Nothing can, and hopefully never will, stop these groups from running websites and holding rallies; however we as citizens and business can say "not on our servers" and not without a 15,000 strong counter rally. Free speech is not mono-directional (the exact same way nature can tell antivaxxers to fuck off until they do a peer reviewed experiment or a forum can ban you for posting affiliate links).
No, it's not. There's a world of difference between running your own website, and running a site on hardware owned by someone else, managed by a completely different party.
Now if it were the ISPs handing this ruling we'd be on the same page, but it isn't. There's no freedom of speech argument for "right to demand services without restriction". Same way a restaurant will turn you away if you show up with "no shirt, no shoes". Namecheap is using the freedom of speech of it's leadership in saying "Nazis and other groups that incite violence are not groups we want to host".
Seems like a distinction without a difference. Even if you run a website on your own server, you are still using the ISP's hardware, so they could make the exact same argument. And hosting services are so popular exactly because ISPs have discouraged self-hosting.
Right for service totally without restrictions, no, but "viewpoint-based discrimination" or other types of discrimination are a separate legal category for a reason. "Shirts and shoes required" is different from "whites only" (or, for that matter, "liberals only") on a restaurant door. We allow the former but not the latter, and I think that's reasonable.
I'm not saying it's illegal to kick them off. I'm suggesting it's bad tactics and will make them stronger. I would prefer we could all go back to ignoring them. I know that that isn't going to happen but I'm trying my bit to help.
You are absolutely correct. The smartest thing the US citizenry could have done is ignore it, but the US citizenry isn't known for doing smart things collectively. Now everyone knows who they are. They've gotten so much press, it's probably would have cost millions to get that much exposure. I suspect they would have doubled or tripled or more their followers and might actually become a real movement. Now it's a first amendment issue, so people who wouldn't normally associate with these sorts of people are forced to defend their right to say something, because collectively, we've decided it's ok to try to squelch them. I mean I'd be hard pressed to pick a worse possible reaction if we want to marginalize this type of thought.
See, even calling them Nazis is stupid. They are nowhere as dangerous as Nazis. Nazis conquered Europe in what? A year? Killed 6 million Jews, etc. 12 million Russians. These people are pissed off at life and where they are, and are looking for an excuse that doesn't involve self examination of their own choices. But they sure as hell ain't Nazis.
They have the support of the President of the United States. It's naive to the extreme to say "ignore them and they'll go away". As Cloudflare learned, if you let them stay they'll point to you as and claim you as a supporter which is bad for business. Because again, I feel like we forget, these are literal Nazis.
Can someone more knowledgeable then me shed some light on a few issues I have?
1) Isn't it the case that the free speech amendment protects censorship only from the government, and not from anyone else, including private or public companies? If so, why do we even bring up the amendment?
2) Isn't it also the case that even from the government, hate speech is not a protected speech?
3) Do we have any evidence that protecting free speech is actually beneficial and desired? What were the reasons for the amendment? And do we have data showing it worked for what it was intended for?
4) How difficult is it to establish a guideline for what is and isn't hate speech? I mean, personally, I don't see a slipery slope. If you're suggesting to physically harm an individual or a group of individuals, I can not see how that's so hard to recognise as hate speech. If your speech holds any value, you should be able to explain it without inciting violence, unless your argument is to incite violence.
1) first amendment basically sats the government can not censor, but a private citizen or business can. But there is account effect, one should be careful of what they censor, last it affects society as a whole. But in this case the company wants to be a proponent of free speech.
2) in the United States hate speech is protected by the first amendment.
3) I'm sure there are plenty of dissertations on the subject. But a society is not free if they don't have free speech. One way to opress a group is to withhold knowledge and information.
4)i would say it is almost impossible to establish a guideline for what is and isn't hate speech. Hate speech does not mean "incite violence"
3) It is beneficial. Back in the day, neo-nazis and holocaust deniers used to file libel laws against their critics in countries outside the US, exploiting limitations of free speech to their own advantage. UK and some other commonwealth countries do not have the protections Americans have concerning speech, so are at the mercy at these laws where the onus is on you to prove you didn't libel not the other way around. As for hate speech, if there is a demonstration here by political enemies of the current regime, the police stand there closely monitoring language they claim violates the law, arrest the speaker then 3 years later the case is thrown out of court but only after thousands in lawyer fees are paid. They also can shut down their newspapers, seize their books, whatever they want. It's an effective way to silence your critics. Another method used here was obscenity laws to shut down gay and lesbian periodicals. There was a gay book store here that had print books without porn seized at the border during import and declared obscene. The onus was on them to prove it wasn't obscene, at great financial cost. Note these books came from the US, where such limitations on expression/speech don't exist.
4) The point is not a concrete guideline, because as written above governments will just abuse this to their advantage. They can always arrest you, seize everything your own, destroy your newspaper ect ect and then years later you prove you did not violate hate speech, but you're still ruined financially and they were able to silence you for a few years. Nation states have endless resources to tie up the courts with phony hate speech cases against their detractors. Imagine if Donald Trump had access to these laws, who has a history of litigating his critics. Be careful what you wish for.
Inciting violence and making threats falls under criminal code, I don't know why you'd want additional laws to just enable the state to do even more damage. It seems much easier to just not give these people the attention seeking platform they desire by turning them into martyrs. They don't want you to rationally dispute their racist views, they want you to try and suppress them so they can 'prove' their conspiracy theories.
Daily Stormer is the far-right version of The Onion. It's extreme racist satire, with outright comedy articles about Pokemon Go, Silicon Valley groupthink, ect. It is odd the media has singled them out as the most dangerous site in the world elevating them to mainstream status from their previous fringe existence. I don't agree with recreating third-reich tabloid newspapers like they have done, but the overwhelming attacks they are receiving for just writing articles is not accomplishing what their detractors think it is, it's just making them more popular and sympathetic to the masses.
You'd think that after dumped a few times they'll switch to some shadier companies, but time and time again they're switching to well known business and getting dumped.
This site is being run in part by weev aka Andrew Auernheimer, somebody that basicly spends all their time finding ways to stir up shit, and generate controversy.
This site has absolutely nothing to do with genuinely disseminating white power ideas, and everything to do with doing exactly what its doing right now, getting thrown off of every popular hosting service it can so it can generate more articles, and more drama. You can be positive its going to make its rounds on pretty much every hosting service there is.
That is the express goal of his actions and I can not beleive nobody is calling that out.
> This site has absolutely nothing to do with genuinely disseminating white power ideas
I feel you're letting them off the hook too easily here. The Daily Stormer absolutely served the function of disseminating white power ideas. They had 120,000 daily visitors at one point, which reportedly included Dylan Roof for example.
Nobody is calling that out because there's an interest from the media to pretend white nationalists, nazis or whatever you want to call them are more of a menace than they actually are. A part of society play the victim card; they live off that.
Of course, the writers of that article are a part of that.
"CEO of CloudFlare, Matthew Prince, said that his company would not be blocking its service to websites listed, as it would mean submitting to "mob rule"." [1]
If they were just the domain registrar I think this is a dangerous precedent. If anything, it is just going to cause people to sympathise with the Daily Stormer, which is presumably the opposite of the intended effect.
EDIT: For anyone who wants to read their site, I think this is it: (onion.casa is a Tor gateway) https://dstormer6em3i4km.onion.casa/
From having a browse around, the site appears to be basically a joke. It's pretty distasteful but I personally don't think it warrants being taken down.